ERP (EAP Reauthentication Protocol) allows a station to quickly
reauthenticate using keys from a previous EAP authentication.
This change both implements ERP as well as moves the key cache into
the ERP module.
ERP in its current form is here to only support FILS. ERP is likely not
widespread and there is no easy way to determine if an AP supports ERP
without trying it. Attempting ERP with a non-ERP enabled AP will actually
result in longer connection times since ERP must fail and then full EAP
is done afterwards. For this reason ERP was separated from EAP and a
separate ERP state machine must be created. As it stands now, ERP cannot
be used on its own, only with FILS.
Add manager.c, a new file where the wiphy and interface creation/removal
will be handled and interface use policies will be implemented. Since
not all kernel-side nl80211 interfaces are tied to kernel-side netdevs,
netdev.c can't manage all of the interfaces that we will be using, so
the logic is being moved to a common place where all interfaces on a
wiphy will be managed according to the policy, device support for things
like P2P and user enabling/disabling/connecting with P2P which require
interfaces to be dynamically added and removed.
This allows IWD to cache ERP keys after a full EAP run. Caching
allows IWD to quickly connect to the network later on using ERP or
FILS.
The cache will contain the EAP Identity, Session ID, EMSK, SSID and
optionally the ERP domain. For the time being, the cache entry
lifetimes are hard coded to 24 hours. Eventually the cache should
be written to disk to allow ERP/FILS to work after a reboot or
IWD restart.
This will allow for blacklisting a BSS if the connection fails. The
actual blacklist module is simple and must be driven by station. All
it does is add BSS addresses, a timestamp, and a timeout to a queue.
Entries can also be removed, or checked if they exist. The blacklist
timeout is configuratble in main.conf, as well as the blacklist
timeout multiplier and maximum timeout. The multiplier is used after
a blacklisted BSS timeout expires but we still fail to connect on the
next connection attempt. We multiply the current timeout by the
multiplier so the BSS remains in the blacklist for a larger growing
amount of time until it reaches the maximum (24 hours by default).
The iwctl client and its unit test depends on readline. If building on a
host without readline installed, default make target succeeds when
configured with --disable-client, but the following make check target
fails.
Fix this by making the test-client target conditional on the
--{enable,disable}-client configure flag.
Using the gcc wrap feature, l_getrandom was redefined to use a known
good, hardcoded random value. The two other tests were also disabled
if l_getrandom is not supported since these do require randomness
for proper testing.
This module is similar to SAE in that it communicates over authenticate
and associate frames. Creating a new OWE SM requires registering two TX
functions that handle sending the data out over CMD_AUTHENTICATE/ASSOCIATE,
as well as a complete function.
Once ready, calling owe_start will kick off the OWE process, first by
sending out an authenticate frame. There is nothing special here, since
OWE is done over the associate request/response.
After the authenticate response comes in OWE will send out the associate
frame which includes the ECDH public key, and then receive the AP's
public key via the associate response. From here OWE will use ECDH to
compute the shared secret, and the PMK/PMKID. Both are set into the
handshake object.
Assuming the PMK/PMKID are successfully computed the OWE complete callback
will trigger, meaning the 4-way handshake can begin using the PMK/PMKID
that were set in the handshake object.
In out-of-tree builds without dependency tracking the src/ directory generally
won't be created before genbuiltin tries to write into it. Fix the race by
explicitly creating the directory.
Netdev/AP share several NL80211 commands and each has their own
builder API's. These were moved into a common file nl80211_util.[ch].
A helper was added to AP for building NEW_STATION to make the associate
callback look cleaner (rather than manually building NEW_STATION).
SAE (Simultaneous Authentication of Equals) takes place during
authentication, and followed by EAPoL/4-way handshake. This
module handles the entire SAE commit/confirm exchange. This was
done similar to eapol.
SAE begins when sae_register is called. At this point a commit
message will be created and sent out which kicks off the SAE
authentication procedure.
The commit/confirm exchange is very similar to EAP-PWD, so all
the ecc utility functions could be re-used as-is. A few new ecc
utility functions were added to conform to the 80211 'blinding'
technique for computing the password element.
- wsc module does not need nl80211 any longer, so remove it.
- Move wsc_init & wsc_exit declarations to iwd.h and remove wsc.h
- re-arrange how wsc_init & wsc_exit is called inside main.c.
The file, src/ecc.c was taken from the bluez project:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/bluetooth/bluez.git/tree/src/shared/ecc.c
There were minor changes made, e.g. changing some functions to globals
for access in EAP-PWD as well as removing some unneeded code. There was
also some code appended which allows for point addition, modulus inverse
as well as a function to compute a Y value given an X.
Read wiphy addresses from sysfs and perform the wiphy name to wiphy idx
mapping using sysfs. Do this directly on a new radio notification and
stop using new wiphy notifications except for updating the radio names.
Having the wiphy index available synchronously when parsing a new radio
event we store the wiphy index in the radio_info_rec struct directly and
drop struct wiphy_info_rec as there was a 1:1 mapping. With this, and
knowing that all radio_info data is available when new interface
notifications are received, the tracking is simplified because dbus
objects can be created and destroyed within the notification handlers.
We also now store both the wiphy hardware address data and separately
the interface MAC addresses and can use them more appropriately in the
medium implementation.
Add a daemon mode that is entered when no action was specified on the
command line. In this mode hwsim tracks information on radios through
the netlink events. The interface to make use of the information is
added in the next patch.
Otherwise the EAP-MD5 driver is not found and we get the following
output:
TEST: EAPoL/8021x EAP-TTLS+EAP-MD5 & 4-Way Handshake
Error initializing EAP for ifindex 1
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
struct handshake_state is an object that stores all the key data and other
authentication state and does the low level operations on the keys. Together
with the next patch this mostly just splits eapol.c into two layers
so that the key operations can also be used in Fast Transitions which don't
use eapol.
Add rfkill.c/rfkill.h to be used for watching per-wiphy RFkill state.
It uses both /dev/rfkill and /sys because /dev/rfkill is the recommended
way of interfacing with rfkill but at the same time it doesn't provide
the information on mapping to wiphy IDs.
knownnetworks.c/.h implements the KnownNetworks interface and loads the
known networks from storage on startup. The list of all the networks
including information on whether a network is known is managed in
network.c to avoid having two separate lists of network_info structures
and keeping them in sync. That turns out to be difficult because the
network.c list is sorted by connected_time and connected_time changes
can be triggered in both network.c or knownnetworks.c. Both can also
trigger a network_info to be removed completely.
Turn netdev watches into device watches. The intent is to refactor out
netdev specific details into its own class and move device specific
logic into device.c away from wiphy.c